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Archive for the ‘Integrative Medicine’ Category

About the Center: Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine

Thursday, May 21st, 2015

The Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of Arizona College of Medicine is leading the transformation of health care by creating, educating, and actively supporting a community that embodies the philosophy and practice of healing-oriented medicine, addressing mind, body and spirit. The Center was founded in 1994 by Dr. Andrew Weil, and has focused its efforts in three domains: education, clinical care and research. The Center was built upon the premise that the best way to change a field is to educate the most gifted professionals and place them in settings where they can, in turn, teach others.

The Center offers a broad range of educational opportunities for health care professionals with an interest in learning and practicing the principles of integrative medicine. The majority of the Center's educational offerings are online, including our flagship program: The Fellowship in Integrative Medicine.

The Center has been serving patients at a small consultative practice at the University of Arizona, partnering with patients to facilitate healing by using a wide range of therapies from conventional and complementary traditions. In 2012, the Center opened a primary care clinic in Phoenix, Ariz.: the Arizona Integrative Health Center. The clinic is positioned to give thousands of Arizonans access to world-class integrative primary care unparalleled in the industry, with longer in-depth patient intake appointments, followed by visits with complementary providers, and unlimited classes on health and wellness topics. The clinic will also be the site for an outcomes study, through which statistically relevant data on the effect of IM will be used to open conversations on a national level about insurance reimbursement for integrative health-care services, wellness and prevention.

Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine research activities contribute rigorous scientific studies on the integration of complementary therapies with conventional medicine, with a focus on educational research, corporate health improvement research, and methods to study clinical outcomes in integrative medicine. The Center made leaps forward in 2012 with the hire of world-renowned researcher Esther Sternberg, MD, to establish a collaborative, multidisciplinary translational research program that will explore the science of the mind-body connection from varying perspectives and then translate those findings into IM practice.

The Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine

The Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine leads the transformation of healthcare by creating, educating and actively supporting a community that embodies the philosophy and practice of healing-oriented medicine, addressing mind, body and spirit.

Our commitment is to live the values of Integrative Medicine, thus creating a unique model for transforming medicine.

Creating a New Generation of Doctors from Andrew Weil, M.D. on Vimeo.

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About the Center: Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine

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What is Integrative Medicine and Health? | Osher Center …

Thursday, May 21st, 2015

What is Integrative Medicine and Health?

Integrative medicine and health reaffirm the importance of the relationship between practitioner and patient, focuses on the whole person, is informed by evidence, and makes use of all appropriate therapeutic approaches, healthcare professionals and disciplines to achieve optimal health and healing.

Integrative medicine combines modern medicine with established approaches from around the world. By joining modern medicine with proven practices from other healing traditions, integrative practitioners are better able to relieve suffering, reduce stress, maintain the well-being, and enhance the resilience of their patients.

Although the culture of biomedicine is predominant in the U.S., it coexists with many other healing traditions. Many of these approaches have their roots in non-Western cultures. Others have developed within the West, but outside what is considered conventional medical practice.

Various terms have been used to describe the broad range of healing approaches that are not widely taught in medical schools, generally available in hospitals or routinely reimbursed by medical insurance.

Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is the name chosen by the National Institutes of Health. CAM is defined as the broad range of healing philosophies, approaches, and therapies that mainstream Western (conventional) medicine does not commonly use, accept, study, understand, or make available. CAM therapies may be used alone, as an alternative to conventional therapies, or in addition to conventional, mainstream medicine to treat conditions and promote well-being.

Integrative medicine is a new term that emphasizes the combination of both conventional and alternative approaches to address the biological, psychological, social and spiritual aspects of health and illness. It emphasizes respect for the human capacity for healing, the importance of the relationship between the practitioner and the patient, a collaborative approach to patient care among practitioners, and the practice of conventional, complementary, and alternative health care that is evidence-based.

According to the 2012 National Health Interview Survey:

Read the 2012 report What Complementary and Integrative Approaches Do Americans Use?

CAM is attractive to many people because of its emphasis on treating the whole person, its promotion of good health and well-being, its valuing of prevention, and its often more personalized approach to patient concerns.

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Center for Integrative Medicine: University of Maryland …

Tuesday, May 19th, 2015

Founded in 1991 by Brian Berman, M.D., the Center for Integrative Medicine (CIM) is an inter-departmental center within the University of Maryland School of Medicine. A leading international center for research, patient care, education and training in integrative medicine, the CIM is a National Institutes of Health (NIH) Center of Excellence for research in complementary medicine.

Emphasizing an approach to healing that values mind, body, and spirit, the Center is committed to:

Join us for a transformative week of healing: June 21 - June 27, 2015

Be part of a University of Maryland, Baltimore study on the role of faith and spirituality in bereavement. This study is an intervention designed to help people who are grieving the loss of a loved one. There is no cost to participants.

Learn more and see if you are eligible to participate.

Join us for our Integrative Medicine Journal Club. Meetings will take place in the East Hall Conference Room at 520 W. Lombard Street, Baltimore, MD 21201.

Contact Dr. Kevin Chen for dates and details.

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Integrative medicine – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tuesday, May 19th, 2015

Integrative medicine, which is also called integrated medicine and integrative health in the United Kingdom,[1] combines alternative medicine with evidence-based medicine. Proponents claim that it treats the "whole person," focuses on wellness and health rather than on treating disease, and emphasizes the patient-physician relationship.[1][2][3][4]

Integrative medicine has been criticized for compromising the effectiveness of mainstream medicine through inclusion of ineffective alternative remedies,[5] and for claiming it is distinctive in taking a rounded view of a person's health.[6]

The Consortium of Academic Health Centers for Integrative Medicine defines it as "the practice of medicine that reaffirms the importance of the relationship between practitioner and patient, focuses on the whole person, is informed by evidence, and makes use of all appropriate therapeutic approaches, healthcare professionals and disciplines to achieve optimal health and healing".[7] Proponents say integrative medicine is not the same as complementary and alternative medicine (CAM)[1][8] nor is it simply the combination of conventional medicine with complementary and alternative medicine.[2] They say instead that it "emphasizes wellness and healing of the entire person (bio-psycho-socio-spiritual dimensions) as primary goals, drawing on both conventional and CAM approaches in the context of a supportive and effective physician-patient relationship".[2]

Critics of integrative medicine see it as being synonymous with complementary medicine, or as "woo".[9]David Gorski has written that the term "integrative medicine" has become the currently preferred term for non-science based medicine.[10]

In the 1990s, physicians in the United States became increasingly interested in integrating alternative approaches into their medical practice, as shown by a 1995 survey in which 80% of family practice physicians expressed an interest in receiving training in acupuncture, hypnotherapy, and massage therapy.[11] In the mid-1990s hospitals in the United States began opening integrative medicine clinics, which numbered 27 by 2001.[11] The Consortium of Academic Health Centers for Integrative Medicine was founded in 1999 and by 2015 included 60 members, such as Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, Georgetown University School of Medicine, and Mayo Clinic. The goal of the Consortium is to advance the practice of integrative medicine by bringing together medical colleges that include integrative medicine in their medical education.[1][12][13] The American Board of Physician Specialties, which awards board certification to medical doctors in the U.S., announced in June 2013 that in 2014 it would begin accrediting doctors in integrative medicine.[14]

Medical professor John McLachlan has written in the BMJ that the reason for the creation of integrative medicine was as a rebranding exercise, and that the term is a replacement for the increasingly discredited one of "complementary and alternative medicine".[6] McLachlan writes that it is an "insult" that integrative medical practitioners claim unto themselves the unique distinction of taking into account "their patients' individuality, autonomy, and views", since these are intrinsic aspects of mainstream practice.[6]

Proponents of integrative medicine say that the impetus for the adoption of integrative medicine stems in part from the fact that an increasing percentage of the population is consulting complementary medicine practitioners. Some medical professionals feel a need to learn more about complementary medicine so they can better advise their patients which treatments may be useful and which are "ridiculous".[8] In addition, they say that some doctors and patients are unsatisfied with what they perceive as a focus on using pharmaceuticals to treat or suppress a specific disease rather than on helping a patient to become healthy. They take the view that it is important to go beyond the specific complaint and draw upon a combination of conventional and alternative approaches to help create a state of health that is more than the absence of disease.[2] Proponents further suggest that physicians have become so specialized that their traditional role of comprehensive caregiver who focuses on healing and wellness has been neglected.[1] In addition, some patients may seek help from outside the medical mainstream for difficult-to-treat clinical conditions, such as fibromyalgia and irritable bowel syndrome.[1]

Integrative medicine is sometimes lumped together with alternative medicine, which has received criticism and has been called "snake oil."[9][15] A primary issue is whether alternative practices have been objectively tested. In a 1998 article in The New Republic, Arnold S. Relman, a former editor of The New England Journal of Medicine stated that "There are not two kinds of medicine, one conventional and the other unconventional, that can be practiced jointly in a new kind of 'integrative medicine.' Nor, as Andrew Weil and his friends also would have us believe, are there two kinds of thinking, or two ways to find out which treatments work and which do not. In the best kind of medical practice, all proposed treatments must be tested objectively. In the end, there will only be treatments that pass that test and those that do not, those that are proven worthwhile and those that are not".[5]

In order to objectively test alternative medicine treatments, in 1991 the U.S. government established the Office of Alternative Medicine, which in 1998 was re-established as the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) as one of the National Institutes of Health. In 2015, NCCAM was re-established as the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH). The mission of NCCIH is "to define, through rigorous scientific investigation, the usefulness and safety of complementary and integrative interventions and to provide the public with research-based information to guide health-care decision making."[16] However, skeptic Steven Novella, a neurologist at Yale School of Medicine, said that NCCAM's activities are "used to lend an appearance of legitimacy to treatments that are not legitimate".[9] The NCCAM website states that there is "emerging evidence that some of the perceived benefits are real or meaningful". NCCAM also says that "the scientific evidence is limited" and "In many instances, a lack of reliable data makes it difficult for people to make informed decisions about using integrative health care".[17]

A 2001 editorial in BMJ said that integrative medicine was less recognized in the UK than in the United States.[8] The universities of Buckingham and Westminster had offered courses in integrative medicine, for which they were criticized.[18][19][20] In the UK organizations such as The Prince's Foundation for Integrated Health, The College of Medicine[21] and The Sunflower Jam[22] advocate or raise money for integrative medicine.

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Integrative medicine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Home: Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine

Tuesday, May 19th, 2015

Learn About Featured Educational Offerings Interprofessional Training Programs

Integrative Health & Lifestyle (IHeLp) - This online innovative, interprofessional program provides a strong foundation in integrative health, emphasizing the key role of lifestyle changes, while applying value-driven healthy behavior change via self-care assignments and group work. It is a pre-requisite to our new Integrative Health Coaching program. Learn more about this program >>

Introduction to Integrative Oncology - Credit Available! It is estimated that a great majority of cancer patients are using complementary therapies, in addition to conventional care. As patients face a life-threatening diagnosis out of their control, they turn to therapies that offer hope and a regained sense of empowerment. Learn about controlling weight, the impact of nutrition, dietary supplements, stress reduction, Traditional Chinese Medicine, Chemo-CAM interactions and more. Learn more about this course offering >>

Aromatherapy & Health: An Introduction - Credit Available! The use of essential oils is gaining attention in health care. They offer another tool that is simple, effective and inexpensive. Aromatherapy is making inroads into hospitals and health care practices around the world. This branch of phytotherapy can be safely employed in most situations to complement and enhance treatments, often with notable results. Learn more about this course offering >>

Dr. Maizes on considering environmental toxins as a cause of disease.

Managing your allergies can involve both medication and lifestyle factors. Dr. Horwitz explains.

AzCIM faculty Dr. Rubin Naiman on the importance of the process of dreaming.

AzCIM Executive Director Victoria Maizes, MD, weighs on the dietary supplement case in New York.

Breathe properly, avoid processed foods, and trust your body's ability to heal. Advice from Andrew Weil, MD in a Men's Journal interview.

Join the Center mailing list to receive more information about workshops, conferences, lectures, online courses, and educational programs.

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Integrative Medicine Program – MD Anderson

Tuesday, May 19th, 2015

The Integrative Medicine Program engages patients and their families to become active participants in improving their physical, psycho-spiritual and social health. The ultimate goals are to optimize health, quality of life and clinical outcomes through personalized evidence-based clinical care, exceptional research and education.

We provide access to multiple data bases of authoritative, up to date reviews on the evidence and safety for the use of herbs, supplements, vitamins, and minerals, as well as other complementary medicine modalities.

To support our efforts in clinical care, research, education and training please consider a donation.

If you are interested in our clinical services and free group classes please visit our Integrative Medicine Center.

Our research focuses on reducing the negative consequences of cancer diagnosis and treatment through studying the use of modalities such as acupuncture, meditation and yoga to treat side effects and improve quality of life. We study the use of plants and other natural compounds to treat cancer and cancer-related symptoms. We also examine the benefits of physical activity, nutrition, stress management and social support on health outcomes.

The goal of the education is to provide authoritative, evidence-based information for health care professionals, caregivers and patients who would like to safely incorporate complementary medicine therapies with conventional cancer care. Our Integrative Medicine Program offers educational activities and trainings, such as a monthly Lecture Series , Research Club, Journal Club, Integrative Oncology Education Series, conferences and workshops.

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Regenerative Medicine with PRP and Stem Cells at San Diego Center for Integrative Medicine – Video

Saturday, August 30th, 2014


Regenerative Medicine with PRP and Stem Cells at San Diego Center for Integrative Medicine
http://SDIntegrativeMedicine.com Regenerative medicine via platelet-rich plasma (PRP) and stem cells is more effective when used prior to surgery.

By: San Diego Center for Integrative Medicine

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Regenerative Medicine with PRP and Stem Cells at San Diego Center for Integrative Medicine - Video

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Dr. Omar Gonzalez presents his Integrative Medicine Clinic in Mexico – Video

Sunday, June 22nd, 2014


Dr. Omar Gonzalez presents his Integrative Medicine Clinic in Mexico
http://www.placidway.com/profile/705/ - Watch this Video as Dr.Omar Gonzalez, MD, specialist in Stem Cell Therapy, Integrative Medicine and Chronic Diseases, presents his new clinic located...

By: placidways

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Why Integrative Medicine and Stem Cell Treatment – Video

Saturday, April 19th, 2014


Why Integrative Medicine and Stem Cell Treatment
Dr. Michael Belich of Integrative Medical Clinics talks about Integrative Medicine and Stem Cell Treatment. For more detailed information go to http://www.in...

By: Integrative Medical Clinics

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Why Integrative Medicine and Stem Cell Treatment - Video

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Stem Cell vs Platelet Rich Plasma Therapy for Knee Pain – Video

Thursday, March 27th, 2014


Stem Cell vs Platelet Rich Plasma Therapy for Knee Pain
http://SDIntegrativeMedicine.com San Diego Center for Integrative Medicine offers both platelet-rich plasma (PRP) therapy and stem cell therapy which are bot...

By: San Diego Center for Integrative Medicine

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Dr. Ioannis Papasotiriou MD, Academy of Comprehensive Integrative Medicine – Video

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2013


Dr. Ioannis Papasotiriou MD, Academy of Comprehensive Integrative Medicine
Testing of Circulating Tumor Cells Cancer Stem-cell-like Cells Offers New Options to Cancer Therapy. October 2012 ,ACIMconnect

By: RGCCLTD

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Drs Judy Lui

Thursday, November 29th, 2012


Drs Judy Lui Julian Rowe Integrative Medicine Spa Vampire FaceLift 30 sec spot
The Vampire FaceLift® Procedure trade; combines the science of hyaluronic acid fillers (ie, Restylane and Juvederm), unipotent stem cells, and beauty to provide a custom designer procedure. This procedure is specific and determined by the US Patent and Trademark office to be unique and original and is protected by the registered trademark: Vampire FaceLift®.From:Crystal RomeroViews:0 0ratingsTime:00:31More inScience Technology

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Celebrity Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeon, Dr. Victor I. Rosenberg Joins Patients Medical

Thursday, October 18th, 2012

NYC Integrative Medicine Center Offers Cosmetic and Reconstructive Surgery to Cancer and Stem Cell Patients. Dr. Rosenberg collaborates with Patients Medical's holistic medical doctors to help patients whose appearance has been diminished by cancer treatment or invasive surgery to look and feel their best again.

New York City, NY (PRWEB) October 18, 2012

This is an excellent opportunity to serve a wide variety of patients, says Dr. Rosenberg. Patients Medical treats cancer patients, the chronically ill and those who have undergone massive surgeries that have left them looking and feeling not as good as they would like to. Im here to make sure they are able to go out in public without having to feel ashamed. I want them to look just as good, if not better, than they feel. I am also here for those who would like breast enhancement, eyelid plasty, liposuction, rhinoplasty, Botox and other changes or enhancements to their appearance. I am very versatile and can assist everyone in meeting their needs.

Dr. Rosenberg is currently working with Dr. Gino Bottino, Holistic Oncologist on hair replacement and skin and face enhancement for those who have undergone chemotherapy and radiation or mastectomy. He is also working with Dr. Kamau Kokayi, Medical Director of the New York Stem Cell Treatment Center (NYSCTC) at Patients Medical. Dr. Rosenberg provides liposuction to those who are participating in the Stem Cell Clinical Trial, allowing Dr. Kokayi and his team to extract stem cells from the patients own fat cells.

Having such an expert in the field of plastic surgery allows our stem cell clinical trial participants to rest assured that their procedure will be performed by a top-notch surgeon who will ensure that the liposuction is minimally invasive without complications, explains Dr. Kokayi.

Dr. Rosenberg graduated from Chicago Medical School and completed his training in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at Mount Sinai Medical Center, Beth Israel Medical Center and Albert Einstein Medical Center. He has been a Diplomate of the American Board of Plastic Surgery since 1969. He is currently affiliated with the Mount Sinai School of Medicine of CUNY.

People interested in receiving plastic, cosmetic and reconstructive surgery at Patients Medical with Dr. Victor I. Rosenberg can inquire directly with Patients Medical for rates, a complete list of services and fees.

About Patients Medical

Patients Medical (http://www.patientsmedical.com) is a unique integrative medicine center in Manhattan that combines the best of traditional and holistic medicine with modern technology to provide comprehensive care. Established in 1974, the center employs a multi-specialty staff using leading-edge treatment protocols such as Stem Cell Therapy, Ultraviolet Blood Irradiation, Nutrient IV Therapy, Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy and more. The practice specializes in diagnosing the root cause of an ailment, then healing the whole person with personalized protocols that draw upon both Eastern and Western medicine.

Megan Franzen Patients Medical 212-679-9667 111 Email Information

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Celebrity Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeon, Dr. Victor I. Rosenberg Joins Patients Medical

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Everyone At Risk From Mad Cow Disease

Sunday, August 12th, 2012

By John von Radowitz, Science Correspondent, PA News

No one is immune to the human form of mad cow disease, variant CJD, new research suggests today.

Some people whose genetic make-up normally acts as a barrier against infection may ultimately develop a different and so-far unrecognised type of disease, it is claimed.

Scientists have shown that individuals with a pair of genes known as MM about a third of the population acquire vCJD relatively easily.

No one with a different paring, VV, has been known to suffer the disease.

Then in August it emerged that a patient from a mixed MV genetic group had been infected with vCJD from contaminated blood, without showing any symptoms. Just over half the population has the MV pairing.

The news sparked fears of a mad cow disease timebomb in the population, with thousands of people unwittingly carrying the brain disease on a long incubation fuse. Read more…

Cardiofy Heart Care Supplement

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Everyone At Risk From Mad Cow Disease

Sunday, August 12th, 2012

By John von Radowitz, Science Correspondent, PA News

No one is immune to the human form of mad cow disease, variant CJD, new research suggests today.

Some people whose genetic make-up normally acts as a barrier against infection may ultimately develop a different and so-far unrecognised type of disease, it is claimed.

Scientists have shown that individuals with a pair of genes known as MM about a third of the population acquire vCJD relatively easily.

No one with a different paring, VV, has been known to suffer the disease.

Then in August it emerged that a patient from a mixed MV genetic group had been infected with vCJD from contaminated blood, without showing any symptoms. Just over half the population has the MV pairing.

The news sparked fears of a mad cow disease timebomb in the population, with thousands of people unwittingly carrying the brain disease on a long incubation fuse. Read more…

Cardiofy Heart Care Supplement

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http://feeds.feedburner.com/integratedmedicine

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Needle-Sharing by Sex Workers Tied to Spread of Syphilis

Sunday, July 8th, 2012

(HealthDay News) -- Needle-sharing among drug abusers may play as big a role as risky sexual behavior in the transmission of syphilis, a new study suggests.

American and Mexican researchers interviewed more than 900 female sex workers in the Mexican border towns of Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez, which are adjacent to San Diego and El Paso, Texas, respectively. The sex workers, who were also tested for HIV and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), operate legally in the two Mexican towns, which are located on major drug trafficking routes.

The researchers found that female sex workers who didn't have HIV, but tested positive for active syphilis infection, were more likely than those without active syphilis infection to inject drugs, to use illegal drugs before or during sex in the past month, and to have U.S. clients who had higher rates of drug use, including the use of injection drugs. Read more…

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Needle-Sharing by Sex Workers Tied to Spread of Syphilis

Sunday, July 8th, 2012

(HealthDay News) -- Needle-sharing among drug abusers may play as big a role as risky sexual behavior in the transmission of syphilis, a new study suggests.

American and Mexican researchers interviewed more than 900 female sex workers in the Mexican border towns of Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez, which are adjacent to San Diego and El Paso, Texas, respectively. The sex workers, who were also tested for HIV and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), operate legally in the two Mexican towns, which are located on major drug trafficking routes.

The researchers found that female sex workers who didn't have HIV, but tested positive for active syphilis infection, were more likely than those without active syphilis infection to inject drugs, to use illegal drugs before or during sex in the past month, and to have U.S. clients who had higher rates of drug use, including the use of injection drugs. Read more…

Cardiofy Heart Care Supplement

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Enriched Skim Milk Good for Gout, Study Suggests

Sunday, July 1st, 2012

(HealthDay News) -- If you have gout, drinking enriched skim milk may help reduce the frequency of painful flare-ups, new research suggests.

The new study included 120 patients who had experienced at least two flare-ups in the previous four months. They were divided into three treatment groups that consumed either lactose powder, skim milk powder or skim milk powder enriched with glycomacropeptide (GMP) and G600 milk fat extract (G600).

Gout, a common form of arthritis, is caused by uric acid buildup in blood. Often, the big toe is the first place where gout strikes. Previous research has shown a higher risk for gout among people who consume fewer dairy products, and earlier work suggested that GMP and G600 tone down the inflammatory response to gout crystals.

The powders were mixed in roughly 8 ounces of water as a vanilla-flavored shake and consumed once a day. The patients recorded their flare-ups and went to a rheumatology clinic once a month. Read more…

Cardiofy Heart Care Supplement

Source:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/integratedmedicine

Read More...

Enriched Skim Milk Good for Gout, Study Suggests

Sunday, July 1st, 2012

(HealthDay News) -- If you have gout, drinking enriched skim milk may help reduce the frequency of painful flare-ups, new research suggests.

The new study included 120 patients who had experienced at least two flare-ups in the previous four months. They were divided into three treatment groups that consumed either lactose powder, skim milk powder or skim milk powder enriched with glycomacropeptide (GMP) and G600 milk fat extract (G600).

Gout, a common form of arthritis, is caused by uric acid buildup in blood. Often, the big toe is the first place where gout strikes. Previous research has shown a higher risk for gout among people who consume fewer dairy products, and earlier work suggested that GMP and G600 tone down the inflammatory response to gout crystals.

The powders were mixed in roughly 8 ounces of water as a vanilla-flavored shake and consumed once a day. The patients recorded their flare-ups and went to a rheumatology clinic once a month. Read more…

Cardiofy Heart Care Supplement

Source:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/integratedmedicine

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Obesity Causes Increased Risk of Kidney Cancer, Kidney Stones, and Stroke

Sunday, June 10th, 2012

by: Steve G. Jones, Ed.S

Obesity is defined as a body mass index (BMI) of 30.0 or greater. BMI is a ratio determined by weight and height. With a large percentage of Americans classified as being obese, research is showing the effects extra weight and obesity have on a person's overall health. Recent studies show that obese people have an increased risk of developing common kidney cancer, kidney stones, and an increased risk of having a stroke.

A study involving 1,640 participants studied the effects of weight on kidney cancer. The average age of patients was 62 and all participants had kidney tumors. The study showed that patients with a BMI of 30 or higher were 48% more likely to develop clear-cell renal cell cancer (RCC). With every 1 point increase in BMI, obese patients increased their odds of getting kidney cancer by 4%.

Out of all the participants, 67% of the obese patients had kidney cancer compared to 57% of non-obese patients. Researchers do not know why there is a link between obesity and kidney cancer. Researchers are looking into a secondary link involving diabetes, hypertension, hormonal changes, and decreased immune function. Read more…

Cardiofy Heart Care Supplement

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